Author - Chelsea Wickstrom

1
CJEU Upholds EDPB’s Authority to Order Broader Investigations in Cross-Border Cases
2
A New Year Brings New Restrictions Relating to AI and California Performers
3
New House AI Bills for the Financial Services Sector
4
Navigating the Intersection of Data Scraping and Artificial Intelligence–A Global Data Protection Authorities Take
5
Mass. SJC Limits Website Tracking Technology Claims Under Wiretap Act
6
Australian Privacy Law Reform – The Wait is (Almost!) Over
7
Privacy Reform Bill Just Around the Corner
8
Japanese Government Published Checklist and Guidance Related to AI and Copyrights
9
Illinois Reigns in Excesses of Biometric Information Privacy Act: Form of Consent Expanded and Claims Limited
10
AI’s Next Frontier: The New Voice of Scam Calls?

CJEU Upholds EDPB’s Authority to Order Broader Investigations in Cross-Border Cases

By: Claude-Étienne Armingaud and Josefine Beil

In a landmark judgment delivered on 29 January 2025, the General Court of the European Union has affirmed the European Data Protection Board‘s (EDPB) authority to require national supervisory authorities to broaden their investigations in cross-border data protection cases.

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A New Year Brings New Restrictions Relating to AI and California Performers

By: Kathleen Parker and Carter Norfleet

Starting 1 January 2025, California Assembly Bill 2602 (AB 2602) will prohibit the use of vague, unfair, and unethical contractual terms that, without the performer’s full awareness, permit the unregulated production, use, and distribution of digital replicas of their likeness.

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New House AI Bills for the Financial Services Sector

By: Christopher Valente, Scott Gelbman, and Joshua Durham

Artificial intelligence (AI) remains top of mind for lawmakers and regulators, who continue to grapple with new legislative proposals, as well as a changing regulatory regime designed to prepare the United States government to interact with AI-related issues, while also positioning the United States to be a leader in AI innovation. In line with 15 USC Ch. 119 and Executive Order 14110, two more bipartisan House bills were just introduced to further the government’s response to AI.

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Navigating the Intersection of Data Scraping and Artificial Intelligence–A Global Data Protection Authorities Take

By: Claude-Etienne Armingaud and Anna Gaentzhirt

In alignment with the ongoing concerns from several European data protection authorities publishing guidelines on data scrapping (i.e., the Dutch DPA, the Italian DPA and the UK Information Commissioner’s Office), the Global Privacy Assembly (GPA)’s International Enforcement Cooperation Working Group (IEWG) recently published a Joint statement on data scraping and the protection of privacy (signed by the Canadian, British, Australian, Swiss, Norwegian, Moroccan, Mexican, and Jersey data protection authorities) to provide further input for businesses when considering data.

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Mass. SJC Limits Website Tracking Technology Claims Under Wiretap Act

By: Christopher Valente and Michael Stortz

In a critical new decision, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has confirmed that the state’s anti-wiretapping statute does not extend to website tracking technologies. In Vita v. New England Baptist Hospital, the Court held that the state’s 1968 Wiretap Act (Mass. G.L. c. 272, § 99) does not apply to the deployment of online software that collects and transmits information regarding user interactions with websites to third parties.

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Australian Privacy Law Reform – The Wait is (Almost!) Over

By: Cameron Abbott, Stephanie Mayhew, and Rob Pulham

The long-awaited privacy reform has finally been introduced into the Australian Parliament today with the introduction of the Privacy and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2024. Described as ‘Tranche 1’ of the reforms, the Bill introduces significant uplifts to several aspects of Australia’s privacy laws.

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Privacy Reform Bill Just Around the Corner

By: Cameron Abbott, Rob Pulham, and Lauren Hrysomallis

There appears to be a further delay to the long-anticipated privacy law reform legislation, most recently expected to be unveiled this month. But even with this delay the wait won’t be long; we could see a draft bill introduced in as little as three weeks’ time.

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Japanese Government Published Checklist and Guidance Related to AI and Copyrights

By: Aiko Yamada and Yuki Sako

On 31 July 2024, the Agency for Cultural Affairs, Government of Japan (the Agency) published “Checklist and Guidance related to AI and Copyrights” (the Checklist), suggesting some ideas to resolve unsettled issues related to “Do inputs to AI infringe copyrights?” (see our previous blog “Japanese Government Identified Issues Related to AI and Copyrights”) for AI developers as described below:

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Illinois Reigns in Excesses of Biometric Information Privacy Act: Form of Consent Expanded and Claims Limited

By: Cameron Abbott and Rob Pulham

In their recent article available here, Joseph Wylie, Kenn Brotman, and J. Morgan Dixon from our Chicago office discuss what changes to privacy law in Illinois will mean for company’s collecting or sharing individual’s biometric data.

AI’s Next Frontier: The New Voice of Scam Calls?

By: Cameron Abbott, Rob Pulham, Dadar Ahmadi-Pirshahid, and Adam Asadurian

Astonishingly (…or perhaps not, for anyone who’s answered a phone call recently), “imposter calls” are the number one offender of spam calls in the United States, amounting to 33% of all phone calls according to a recent study by QR Code Generator.

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